Most recently, he has been battered by a string of controversies involving his office’s decision to lower some commercial property tax assessments by $2.6 billion and his policy to keep internal audits private, which were revealed by The Washington Post and are now the subjects of two federal investigations.
“Though I look forward to the next chapter in my life, this was not an easy decision,” Gandhi wrote in his resignation letter Friday to Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D). He thanked Gray and the previous mayors who appointed him — Anthony A. Williams and Adrian M. Fenty — “for giving me the opportunity to participate in the District’s financial rejuvenation and to serve the residents of this great city.”
Gandhi, who has held the office since 2000, said he will retire June 1.
David Umansky, a spokesman for Gandhi, said the resignation was “entirely for purely personal reasons.” He declined to elaborate.
In notifying some city officials ahead of Friday’s announcement, Gandhi — a 72-year-old grandfather who was widowed in 2011 — cited a burgeoning relationship with a Philadelphia woman with whom he went to India recently.
The trip “was a very sincere, soulful experience,” said one person who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the conversation. “I think he just felt like this was a sign that it was time to move on.”
On Tuesday, Gandhi joined Gray in announcing the results of the District’s annual financial audit. The audit confirmed the budget surplus, which will push city budget reserves to $1.5 billion, the second-highest level in city government history.
“This is truly a financial renaissance, a reformation, that belongs in the municipal annals,” Gandhi said, alluding to the half-billion dollar deficits that led Congress to take control of the city from 1995 through 2001.
“We are in exceptionally good condition. We are viewed very favorably on Wall Street, and when we go back again in February, we will go with our heads held high, saying we come from a city on a hill,” he said.
But the past year has been among Gandhi’s most difficult — rivaled only by the 2007 revelation that mid-level employee Harriette Walters had orchestrated a $50 million theft from the city tax office.
Most recently, questions have emerged over his handling of internal audits that outlined problems throughout his agency. One of them, obtained by The Post last year, described a “significantly flawed” system in which tax supervisors could access property records and alter them without being detected. Gandhi, who as CFO oversees the tax office, defended keeping the internal audits private, but the D.C. Council approved legislation that requires such reports to be shared with city officials and the public in a timely manner.
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